Post by RiP, IMDb on Oct 16, 2018 5:15:49 GMT
Is this the missing jet from the 1953 Kinross UFO incident?
"At 6:22 p.m. on November 23, 1953, an F-89 Scorpion jet was scrambled from Kinross Air Force Base near the Michigan Soo to intercept an unidentified object detected in restricted airspace over the Soo Locks.".
The disappearance of two Madison airmen in 1953 remains a mystery
""The unsolved case called "one of the most enduring mysteries of the Great Lakes" has been the subject of numerous articles and a film on Canadian television."".
Another unsolved mystery: The Kinross Incident
"The Kinross Incident is a famous aviation accident which many still believe shows proof of an extraterrestrial encounter. The story unfolds in late November in 1953 over the Great Lakes.".
Mystery over Lake Superior
"The history of Lake Superior includes some legendary events which we have examined over the years here on the Pasty Cam, like the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald or the City of Bangor incident, or the drowning of Douglass Houghton. Today's Shoebox Memory looks back to 1953 when two young pilots were lost in a mission which remains an unexplained mystery.".
November 23, 1953: UFO captures US fighter jet! (Kinross Incident)
"A Brief History: On November 23, 1953, a United States Air Force F-89C interceptor fighter jet was scrambled to intercept an unknown radar contact over Lake Michigan. The jet, both crewmen (pilot and radar operator) were never seen or heard from again. Were this Air Force jet and its crew abducted by aliens? You be the judge.".
The Bizarre 1953 Kinross UFO Incident
"Just as frightening as the Mantell incident, though more bizarre and less publicized, was a fatal encounter that occurred on November 23, 1953, over Lake Superior. That evening, as Air Defense Command radar tracked an unidentified target moving at 500 miles per hour over the lake, an F-89C all-weather jet interceptor from Kinross AFB took off in hot pursuit. Radar operators watched the aircraft close in on the UFO, and then something fantastic happened: The two blips merged and then faded on the screen, and all communication with the interceptor ceased. An extensive land and water search found not a trace of the craft nor the two men aboard it: pilot Lt. Felix Moncla, Jr., and radar observer Lt. R. R. Wilson."
The 1953 Kinross UFO Incident
Investigation of The Great Lakes Dive Company
""Note—In the aftermath of the portentous claims of the so-called “Great Lakes Dive Company” as well as their mysterious disappearance, a few of us (myself included) have been actively involved in the investigation of these declarations as well as “authenticity of the company”; understandably MUFON took an interest in the claims of GLDC and it’s alleged mouthpiece, an individual calling himself “Adam Jimenez”; much of their (MUFON) investigative path paralleled my own; consequently we came up with the same results."".
Felix Moncla
"First Lieutenant Felix Eugene Moncla Jr. (October 21, 1926 – presumed dead November 23, 1953) was a United States Air Force pilot who disappeared while performing an air defense intercept over Lake Superior in 1953. This is sometimes known as the Kinross Incident, after Kinross Air Force Base, where Moncla was on temporary assignment when he disappeared.".
"At 6:22 p.m. on November 23, 1953, an F-89 Scorpion jet was scrambled from Kinross Air Force Base near the Michigan Soo to intercept an unidentified object detected in restricted airspace over the Soo Locks.".
The disappearance of two Madison airmen in 1953 remains a mystery
""The unsolved case called "one of the most enduring mysteries of the Great Lakes" has been the subject of numerous articles and a film on Canadian television."".
Another unsolved mystery: The Kinross Incident
"The Kinross Incident is a famous aviation accident which many still believe shows proof of an extraterrestrial encounter. The story unfolds in late November in 1953 over the Great Lakes.".
Mystery over Lake Superior
"The history of Lake Superior includes some legendary events which we have examined over the years here on the Pasty Cam, like the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald or the City of Bangor incident, or the drowning of Douglass Houghton. Today's Shoebox Memory looks back to 1953 when two young pilots were lost in a mission which remains an unexplained mystery.".
November 23, 1953: UFO captures US fighter jet! (Kinross Incident)
"A Brief History: On November 23, 1953, a United States Air Force F-89C interceptor fighter jet was scrambled to intercept an unknown radar contact over Lake Michigan. The jet, both crewmen (pilot and radar operator) were never seen or heard from again. Were this Air Force jet and its crew abducted by aliens? You be the judge.".
The Bizarre 1953 Kinross UFO Incident
"Just as frightening as the Mantell incident, though more bizarre and less publicized, was a fatal encounter that occurred on November 23, 1953, over Lake Superior. That evening, as Air Defense Command radar tracked an unidentified target moving at 500 miles per hour over the lake, an F-89C all-weather jet interceptor from Kinross AFB took off in hot pursuit. Radar operators watched the aircraft close in on the UFO, and then something fantastic happened: The two blips merged and then faded on the screen, and all communication with the interceptor ceased. An extensive land and water search found not a trace of the craft nor the two men aboard it: pilot Lt. Felix Moncla, Jr., and radar observer Lt. R. R. Wilson."
The 1953 Kinross UFO Incident
Investigation of The Great Lakes Dive Company
""Note—In the aftermath of the portentous claims of the so-called “Great Lakes Dive Company” as well as their mysterious disappearance, a few of us (myself included) have been actively involved in the investigation of these declarations as well as “authenticity of the company”; understandably MUFON took an interest in the claims of GLDC and it’s alleged mouthpiece, an individual calling himself “Adam Jimenez”; much of their (MUFON) investigative path paralleled my own; consequently we came up with the same results."".
Felix Moncla
"First Lieutenant Felix Eugene Moncla Jr. (October 21, 1926 – presumed dead November 23, 1953) was a United States Air Force pilot who disappeared while performing an air defense intercept over Lake Superior in 1953. This is sometimes known as the Kinross Incident, after Kinross Air Force Base, where Moncla was on temporary assignment when he disappeared.".